Vaccines
List of authorised vaccines
This list contains all vaccines currently authorised in Austria (alphabetically by product name) with the following information:
- product name
- marketing authorisation holder
- indication
- target group
- possible remarks
- Adjuvant yes/no or type of adjuvant
- Thiomersal yes/no
Information on current availability and pricing as well as comparisons between different products with the same indication are not included.
On the question of availability, it is possible to consult the "Shortages Catalogue" list.
Vaccination recommendations of the Austrian NIG (Nationales Impfgremium).
- Vaccine_list_March_2026| 287 KB09/03/2026
- Vaccine list since 1950| 282 KB09/03/2026
Austrian Vaccination Plan
The "Austrian Vaccination Plan" contains all current national vaccination recommendations.
Reactions and side effects after vaccinations
Hardly any other medicine causes as much uncertainty and - sometimes unfounded - fear as vaccines. This is partly due to the fact that the people vaccinated are healthy people (primarily children) and partly due to the large amount of misinformation in the media, especially on the internet.
Uncertainty and scepticism with regard to vaccinations are primarily based on fear of vaccination side effects or vaccine damage. In order to provide evidence-based information for both healthcare professionals and patients, a corresponding addendum to the Austrian Vaccination Plan has been drawn up.
This deals with definitions and delimitations regarding vaccination reactions, vaccination side effects and vaccination damage, causality assessment of vaccination side effects, the role of the Medicines Agency as a monitoring body and adjuvants (in particular adjuvants). It also describes how the ‘Side effects’ section of the product information is created.
Vaccination Recommendations
New website of the Ministry of Health: "Vaccination simply protects"
The document "Vaccinations for adults of working age, explanations and definitions in addition to the Austrian Vaccination Plan" can be downloaded from the BMGF website.
The document "Vaccinations for health care workers, recommendations as an extension of the Austrian Vaccination Plan" can be downloaded online.
Austrian Medical Association: “Check your Immunisation”.
Approval of vaccines
Prophylactic vaccines must be safe drugs as far as possible because, unlike therapeutic drugs, they are mostly administered to healthy people who, depending on their exposure, may only have a small risk of developing the disease without vaccination.
This results in special requirements for the so-called benefit-risk assessment of vaccines within the framework of an approval procedure. Modern vaccines are generally well tolerated due to the current production and analytical control requirements.
Approval process for a vaccine
A vaccine is approved in Europe within the framework of EU-wide or national procedures according to a strictly regulated procedure within legal deadlines. The quality (manufacturing), safety and efficacy of a vaccine are reviewed based on preclinical and clinical data.
The official activities form a very complex safety net at all levels in the life cycle of a drug or vaccine: clinical trials, scientific advice, approval procedures, post-marketing studies required on a case-by-case basis, official inspections, batch testing and pharmacovigilance.
Batch release
Before a batch of vaccine may be placed on the Austrian market, it must have been tested by an Official Medicines Control Laboratory (OMCL) of an EU/EEA Member State. The results must comply with the specifications approved in the Austrian approval. The batch production and test protocols are checked for each product batch. In addition, the submitted test samples are subjected in labor to the prescribed analyses. Additionally to its long-standing experience with the testing of plasma products, the Austrian OMCL of BASG/AGES specialised in recent years on the testing of vaccines.